MONY Group reviews

3.5

57% would recommend to a friend

(255 total reviews)
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Peter Duffy

64% approve of CEO

49% positive business outlook

MONY Group has an employee rating of 3.5 out of 5 stars, based on 255 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The MONY Group employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Information Technology industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

255 reviews
1.0
Aug 22, 2021
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Free food, some other benefta

Cons

Claim to be a customer focussed business but made all customer research, insight and prototypers redundant The annual Christmas time redundancies, how thoughtful! Make a loud noise about the mental well-being of staff but in reality none of the management have any idea of how or trained to deal with such issues Claim they want open and honest communication but any member of staff who dares to ask questions which make management feel uncomfortable are made to feel like they’ve done something wrong! Hypocritical HR people - what they preach completely differs with how individuals from their own department behave A once great place to work has lost it’s soul and forgotten it’s purpose, probably consistent with when Ewloe was demoted from it’s status of head office. How can the bigwigs in London decide what is best for it’s customers, when those customer demographics are more in line with the community of North Wales? I expect some politician type response to this from a senior member at the company . I also expect that reply to be so out of touch with the thoughts and feelings of those who work ‘on the ground’ Don’t be fooled by the Xbox and the free food, this is no longer a nice place to work!

1.0
Jul 26, 2021
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The people who used to be here and the very complex business model and constantly re-inventing strategy that would make you feel like you've learned the equivalent of having worked for at least 3 different other companies during your tenure at MSMG

Cons

Here’s my 2-pence War & Peace, quite fittingly so I’d say. I am neither providing this feedback lightly nor flippantly, but rather giving it my full consideration and dutiful attention. I started feeling really low and undervalued and insecure in my role around April-May 21 but that wasn’t even all of it, the whole ‘vibe’ was off and I felt really disengaged and demotivated in doing the role I’d been so passionate about for almost 7 years, despite changes to my team, to systems, to MSM structure across the years, etc. And then I realised it was because I found zero inspiration in the new SLT and failed to see any strategy/vision that would lead to success. The ‘failure to see’, as it soon also became apparent, was actually impossibility to see because there wasn’t any strategy to begin with but rather we’d all been asked to ‘tread the line’ pretty much and follow the directives coming from above, whereby the new SLT decided that whatever worked in their previous places of work is also guaranteed to work for MSM, without their having done their due diligence so to speak. We are all subject matter experts in our areas, particularly some who’ve been working for decades in this space and also with a decent tenure within MSM itself, but when the most recent changes started hitting us all in waves (operative word ‘hitting’), none of our expertise had been sought, rather an almost dictatorship regime was instated, whereby we just had to conform, adapt and deliver ‘at pace’… oh, and give us a smile! All under the guise of transparency and clarity in communication and of course, freedom of speech - apart from the sarcastically tolerant and ever present, condescending line of ‘oh, Anonymous is back!’ at every floor brief! As an aside, if totalitarian regimes taught us anything - albeit in theory - it was that fear stopped one from giving their own name away should there be repercussions for anything one might say/ask or even be found guilty of w/o saying anything. But alas, ‘anonymous’ only survived till the 5th July floor brief, when he/she/it got censored and Peter Duffy delivered his 2021 - 2022 ‘strategy’ in monologue and, by now, trademark style: what will be delivered - how and who with remains TBD. Ignoring the status quo, I can say, hand on heart, this is the best company and the best team I’ve ever worked for/in and I will not let these last months taint that - it would be disrespectful to the previous SLTs. We’ve gone through so much change over the last 7 years (the longest I ever stayed in one place and that means something), from multiple office moves, to multiple rebrands, to multiple migrations - work is not what I ever shy away from! I never even minded having to come to the office on a random Boxing Day to fix something, or stay in the office till 3am one Friday night to see something go live, not to mention countless 14-hr days - all of the above fully acknowledged and appreciated by my senior managers (but also landing me with a friendly reprimand on minding my work/life balance). The bottom line is, I put so much pride in my work because it was the vision and the strategy and the ‘light at the end of the tunnel’ that I believed in and I could see the value I brought to any project I was working on. Now all of that ‘light’ is gone and all my energy, enthusiasm, passion and pride in a job well done have gone with it! This used to be an amazing company with an incredible culture and we all, literally all, gave it our everything because we felt appreciated, valued and supported - no one I spoke to recently feels that anymore. The film ‘Moon’ (2009) crosses my mind, and, spoiler alert, even those had a shelf life of 3 years before being ruthlessly replaced. But the ‘new’ MSM strategy is even better: who needs replacement when we can do everything we used to and more and better ‘at pace’, with half of the people and some teams completely scraped off?! It’s the new definition of ‘agile’. Well then, keep an eye on major incidents and the plummeting share price! It pains me to write this and I’m not going to say to anyone thinking of joining MSMG ‘keep away!’ but I’m hoping that the SLT read these reviews and try to change their attitude and somehow swerve back to the core culture of this business, else all those still left at MSM will leave, but maybe that’s the strategy so they can bring their own people on-board?! But I fear the damage is already done and is irreparable/irreversible. And that’s not the feeble, inflexible or reluctant-to-change in me talking, it’s the me who managed people and who prided themselves in showing compassion, support and empathy in the way I mentored/led my team. I was lucky to have found a job elsewhere soon after I resigned on grounds of bad vibes affecting me to my very core and, I must admit, I feel conflictingly both liberated and guilty for securing a lifeboat out, but I still sling on to hope that things will change at MSM for the sake of all still left here. Apologies for the long essay, but it all had to be said. Good luck to you all!

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MONY Group Response
4y
Thank you for taking the time to write a review. We’ve put a great deal of thought into how we do more to share our strategy and engage our people in the journey we’re heading on as a business in order to stay relevant and sustainable for the long-term. In a recent survey we were really pleased to see comments around how people now have a greater understanding of what we’re working towards and therefore why we’re making the changes we have been, which is really positive to see. Our Senior Leadership Team may look very different than it did just a year ago, but these changes have all been made with the longevity of our business and our strategy in mind. Now, with restrictions beginning to lift we’re looking forward to getting our Exec and Senior Leaders out and about around our sites meeting teams, listening to feedback and forging relationships. We’ve seen a lot of change in recent months, as have so many businesses in the wake of the pandemic, but we’re confident that these changes are for the best and will continue to do everything we can to support our people through the transition and beyond. - Hannah, Director of People & Organisation
2.0
Jul 29, 2021

A sinking ship

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- The people are great - Free breakfast (and not just a cheap crappy one!) - Nice office with great views of Manchester - Competitive salary

Cons

I joined MoneySuperMarket as it was hailed as one of the best tech places to work in Manchester, but as soon as I arrived everything was off, and I was looking for new jobs within the first week. I stuck it out for as long as I could, but it just got worse! When I joined, I was sold on the business being customer/user focussed but found out early on that every decision came from up top, and even then, with the constant change of management and structure it became hard to follow what we were all aiming for. The new management are about as us-and-them as it gets, and blatantly ignore feedback from employees. This was particularly noticeable when most staff voted for flexible working off the back of 18 successful months of working from home during the pandemic. How did management react? They increased the pre-pandemic 1 day a week from home to a whopping 2 days from home; hardly progressive. In the last month there has been announcements of a restructure as well as some strange decisions for the future of the design and CRM teams. This includes a decision to massively reduce the amount of time spent on user research, the fundamental building block of good user experience. A lot of people are angry at the changes, there has been a lot of uncertainty, and motivation is at an all-time low. This has meant that a lot of great and talented people have lost their jobs or have left because they didn't believe in the proposed changes; and I don't blame them. The salary was competitive, but the yearly bonus and a self-development fund (which was sold to me as “it can even be spent on an Apple Watch”) were empty promises; so, it’s not like there was even anything to take the edge off the bitter atmosphere!

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MONY Group Response
4y
Thank you for taking time to leave a review, although I’m sad to hear you’ve not had a more positive experience working here. We understand that the fundamental design methodology change we have made, (away from Double Diamond to Lean UX) is impactful and so we are working to support our colleagues through this period of transition. We’ve recently shared our vision and detailed strategy which outlines how colleagues contribute to it and have made some promotions into the Executive team in response to colleague feedback about internal career progression. Following the introduction of our new learning platform in 2020, the self-development fund evolved to meet any working from home equipment needs. When it comes to our future of work plans, we’ve worked hard to balance the needs of individuals, teams and the Group. We ran extensive sessions over several weeks with colleagues from across the Group to reflect their needs and inform our decisions, which were communicated earlier this year. We’ve also introduced 'work from anywhere weeks' and have had a positive response to our additional 'company day(s) off’ this year. Hannah, Director of People & Organisation
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